Author
Listed:
- Marina Naval-Sanchez
(CSIRO Agriculture and Food)
- Quan Nguyen
(CSIRO Agriculture and Food)
- Sean McWilliam
(CSIRO Agriculture and Food)
- Laercio R. Porto-Neto
(CSIRO Agriculture and Food)
- Ross Tellam
(CSIRO Agriculture and Food)
- Tony Vuocolo
(CSIRO Agriculture and Food)
- Antonio Reverter
(CSIRO Agriculture and Food)
- Miguel Perez-Enciso
(Centre for Research in Agricultural Genomics (CRAG)
ICREA, Carrer de LluĂs Companys 23)
- Rudiger Brauning
(AgResearch Ltd, Invermay Agricultural Centre)
- Shannon Clarke
(AgResearch Ltd, Invermay Agricultural Centre)
- Alan McCulloch
(AgResearch Ltd, Invermay Agricultural Centre)
- Wahid Zamani
(Tarbiat Modares University)
- Saeid Naderi
(University of Guilan)
- Hamid Reza Rezaei
(Gorgan University of Agricultural Sciences and Natural resources)
- Francois Pompanon
(Universite Grenoble Alpes)
- Pierre Taberlet
(Universite Grenoble Alpes)
- Kim C. Worley
(Baylor College of Medicine)
- Richard A. Gibbs
(Baylor College of Medicine)
- Donna M. Muzny
(Baylor College of Medicine)
- Shalini N. Jhangiani
(Baylor College of Medicine)
- Noelle Cockett
(Utah State University)
- Hans Daetwyler
(Transport and Resources
La Trobe University)
- James Kijas
(CSIRO Agriculture and Food)
Abstract
Domestication fundamentally reshaped animal morphology, physiology and behaviour, offering the opportunity to investigate the molecular processes driving evolutionary change. Here we assess sheep domestication and artificial selection by comparing genome sequence from 43 modern breeds (Ovis aries) and their Asian mouflon ancestor (O. orientalis) to identify selection sweeps. Next, we provide a comparative functional annotation of the sheep genome, validated using experimental ChIP-Seq of sheep tissue. Using these annotations, we evaluate the impact of selection and domestication on regulatory sequences and find that sweeps are significantly enriched for protein coding genes, proximal regulatory elements of genes and genome features associated with active transcription. Finally, we find individual sites displaying strong allele frequency divergence are enriched for the same regulatory features. Our data demonstrate that remodelling of gene expression is likely to have been one of the evolutionary forces that drove phenotypic diversification of this common livestock species.
Suggested Citation
Marina Naval-Sanchez & Quan Nguyen & Sean McWilliam & Laercio R. Porto-Neto & Ross Tellam & Tony Vuocolo & Antonio Reverter & Miguel Perez-Enciso & Rudiger Brauning & Shannon Clarke & Alan McCulloch &, 2018.
"Sheep genome functional annotation reveals proximal regulatory elements contributed to the evolution of modern breeds,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 9(1), pages 1-13, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:9:y:2018:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-017-02809-1
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-017-02809-1
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